Saturday, July 05, 2025

SCOTT/SOPHIA HUTCHINS 1996-2025

Caitlyn Jenner Girlfriend Sophia ... 

Scott Hutchins

Sophia Hutchins, Caitlyn Jenner's Close ... 

Sophia Hutchins

When my good friend and colleague Dennis Torres was the Director of Real Estate at Pepperdine, Scott worked in the Real Estate Office as a student employee.  Dennis said that he was taken aback when one day Scott arrived for work as Sophia, but Dennis basically said OK, we've got work to do!  Scott was the Junior Class President of the Student Government Association, and here is a story about his resignation from the SGA post:   

After sitting tensely in front of his computer for two hours, junior Scott Hutchins submitted a Facebook post that he said he had been waiting to post since the beginning of the school year. With feelings of anxiousness and nervousness, he pressed the “post” button and immediately shut his laptop.

Hutchins announced his resignation as SGA Junior Class President on the “Class of 2018” Facebook page Nov. 2 without an explicit explanation to his peers. Within several minutes, he said he received countless Facebook messages and texts from people asking why he was resigning. Later that weekend, Hutchins attended an ICA conference where even more people asked him why he was leaving his position. He said he realized that he had the choice to lie about his absence or be open about it. In doing so, Hutchin’s transparency with his student body shows value in communicating ethically with his peers.
 

Scott Hutchins will take a leave of absence for this semester in order to complete his gender transition into a woman, he said. He said he wants to be open with his story to try to help other people in a similar situation.


“I’ve always had the question of ‘Do I want to transition from male to female?’” Hutchins said. “I never thought a lot about doing it until I got into college because I was able to break away from my family and started to establish my own identity.” 


“College gave me the time to deal with a lot of issues that had always been there,” Hutchins said. At the beginning of college, he said he started seeing a therapist who helped him reach the conclusion that it was time to begin his transition. Since the beginning of college, he said he slowly began to physically transition his body by going through medical procedures, such as hormone treatments and hair removal procedures, to alter his appearance. This semester, Hutchins will complete the transition medically, emotionally and socially by engaging with people as a female.

Hutchins said he knew that he identified himself as a female from a very young age. In the third grade, he researched transgenders and the process of transitioning. When he was 15 years old, he verbally expressed that he was a woman for the first time to one of his best friends.
 

“It’s almost like it just came out,” Hutchins said. “I didn’t even mean to let it out since I had been so used to holding it in and brushing it under the rug.”


Despite these overwhelming feelings, Hutchins said he was still uncertain whether he would ever transition at that age. In the past few years, Hutchins said there were two motivating factors that encouraged him to transition: Watching Caitlyn (formerly Bruce) Jenner’s interview announcing her own gender transition on ABC’s 20/20 and strong support from his family and friends. Hutchins said that Jenner’s interview “made it so much more real for [him], like normal and successful people do this and people are OK when they do it.” He said the interview pushed him forward to finish his transition at full speed. There was also strong encouragement from Hutchins’ friends, both within and outside the Pepperdine community. One of his closest friends, Ella Giselle, who is not a Pepperdine student, has undergone her own gender transition.


“I think the importance of having friends that have already gone through it is something different than what a therapist will offer you,” Giselle said. “It’s good for mental stability to have someone to go through it with you and endure it with.” As Giselle said she is always happy to answer his questions, she explained that this is a reciprocal support system. “I’ve already come out and have been living full time as my newer self,” Giselle said. “But Scott is my support too; you always need support.”


Hutchins said that Giselle and other trans people told him they wish they had transitioned sooner which made him realize he should prioritize his transition as “everything else can wait.” Before transitioning, Hutchins said he was gay because he believed it would be easier for people to accept him; but he knew deep down he was not gay. He is openly involved in the LGBTQ community at
Pepperdine as the chair of the LGBTQ+ committee in SGA and a member of Crossroads, the university’s first LGBTQ+ club. Hutchins said he was a strong advocate in the creation Crossroads in SGA by voting on resolution supporting the club and their constitution.
 

“I really did that not just for myself, being in that community, but for the school to really bring them forward,” Hutchins said. “I feel like the climate is moving in the right direction regarding LGBTQ issues.”


Hutchins said he hoped the establishment of Crossroads would make him feel more accepted,
not just by students but by faculty, staff, and administration. Hutchins also said the administration should create specific policies for transgender students, specifically with housing guidelines. During his sophomore year, Hutchins had to request for housing exemption in order to live off-campus. By doing this, Hutchins is affecting change through- out other realms of the school, going beyond the social aspect and creating policy that will help other students.
 

“If you’re a new student here and transitioning, where are you going to live?” Hutchins asked. “The male dorms or the female dorms? They need to come up with some specific policies in that and I would really like to be involved with that process in the future.” Hutchins said he wanted to give a voice to the trans people, especially those who are not open about their transition, here at Pepperdine. “Everyone has their own reasons for not being out,” he said. “I really want to be their voice, normalize the issue, and let people know who are struggling that they are not alone.


Hutchins plans to return to Pepperdine for the fall 2017 semester and re-introduce himself with a new name and look. “I am apprehensive about students heckling me,” Hutchins said. “It still worries me, but I think that once people see and meet me, they will realize that I am the
same person, but just looking differently.” He said he hopes to continue his involvement with SGA. Regarding his position as Junior Class President, he said it is important to him that his replacement
is someone who is familiar with the job and shows a strong interest in it. Hutchins said he hopes the Pepperdine community can keep an open mind and think critically about gender, gender roles and how they are created. Since there are not many open transgender students at the school, he finds this experience “a bit nerve-wracking.” 

Hutchins said he understands people are curious about the process and is happy to answer their questions but he encourages his peers to think about the type of questions they are
asking. Giselle said the biggest mistake anyone could make is to idly watch and not ask questions. She said people should not be concerned if the question is “wrong” because that is how they will learn about the process.

 “People always ask me about my physical appearance,” Hutchins said. “They’ve been asking me a lot about my hair, my skin and my nose.” Aside from the physical changes, Hutchins said there is an emotional aspect to transitioning that not many people consider.“Nobody ever asks me ‘How are you doing?’ when I tell them I am transitioning,” Hutchins added. “I feel like they are not concerned about me. As a friend and a classmate, I feel like people should be concerned with how [I am] doing but no one instantly thinks of that."

 Fong, Jennevieve (2017) "Scott Hutchins Explains His SGA Resignation,"Pepperdine Journal of Communication Research: Vol. 5, Article 6.  Note: An earlier version of this article was published on Pepperdine Graphic Media Online on Dec. 11, 2016

 

After Scott transitioned to Sophia, there were numerous reports that Sophia and Caitlyn Jenner were romantically involved.  Both denied such a relationship and stated that theirs was a personal friendship based on Sophia being Jenner's business manager.

 Sophia Hutchins and Caitlyn Jenner attend The Hollywood Reporter's Empowerment In Entertainment Event 2019 at Milk Studios on April 30, 2019 in Los...

While reading a recent Malibu Times, I noted a story about a tragic fatal accident:

A tragic accident on Decker Canyon Road in Malibu claimed the life of a 29-year-old woman on Tuesday morning, July 2. 

According to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, deputies from the Malibu/Lost Hills Sheriff’s Station responded to a call reporting a traffic collision with possible injuries at approximately 10:20 a.m. in the 4200 block of Decker Canyon Road, just a quarter-mile south of Decker Edison Road.

Preliminary investigations indicate that the woman, identified only as a 29-year-old white female (FW/29), was driving a black/blue 2013 Polaris RGR-800 Crew Side-by-Side ATV southbound on the narrow canyon road when she collided into the rear bumper of a gray 2016 Mazda 6, also traveling southbound. The driver of the Mazda, a 51-year-old white female (FW/51), was reportedly uninjured, along with her passenger.

Authorities say the impact from the collision caused the ATV to veer off the right shoulder of the roadway and over the cliff side. The off-road vehicle plummeted approximately 350 feet into the ravine below.

Emergency medical personnel responded quickly to the scene but tragically pronounced the ATV driver deceased at the bottom of the canyon.

As of Wednesday morning, officials have not released the identity of the deceased pending notification of next of kin.

Sheriff’s deputies report that there were no immediate signs of intoxication or impairment by either driver. The cause of the collision remains under investigation.

Decker Canyon Road, known for its winding, narrow layout and steep drop-offs, has been the site of multiple serious and fatal accidents over the years. The Sheriff’s Department is urging all motorists to exercise extreme caution when traveling along canyon roads in the Malibu area.

The Malibu/Lost Hills Sheriff’s Station is asking anyone who may have witnessed the collision or who has any information related to the incident to contact Detective Shean at the Traffic Investigations Office by calling (818) 878-1808. Reference report #25-02752-10.

As of now, no further information is available regarding the victim or additional circumstances surrounding the crash. Updates will be provided as the investigation continues.

Soon thereafter it was announced that the person who died was Sophia Hutchins.

10 comments:

Paula said...

That is really sad

DES said...

Totally agree Cuz.

Dean G. Barry said...

How can you be so sad? I read where it was a "Trump campaign surrogate," whatever that is. And didn't it get the word about the necessity of extra alert driving on canyon roads? I was told that even before I moved to CA.

Rick O'Shea said...

It was still a male. It had xy male chromosomes and no uterus. Lipstick and a dress and a removeadicktomy operation do not change a man into a woman.

Dilbert Doe said...

Something fishy about the Sophia photo, especially the nose. Did it get a facelift operation?

Dean G. Barry said...

Some may be offended by calling Scott an "it," but he never was and never will be a female, but to call him a "he" is equally offensive to many, so "it" it is.

DES said...

Cousin Steve, I appreciate most of your comments and even chuckle at some of your aliases. However, I have decided to no longer accept anonymous comments, unless it was inadvertent. So, please resubmit your comments as Steve Heller and I will gladly respond, and even express some agreement with your perspectives! 😄

Steve Heller said...

A person never knows when comments on the internet may be taken out of context or used against them, thus aliases prevent that. I can joke about something and someone can come along and say Steve Heller said this or thinks that and totally distort my opinion or use it as a smear. Aliases are lighthearted and entertaining, whereas a real name adds seriousness and blandness due to the need to be on the defensive.

Steve Heller said...

Another thing to keep in mind is that anyone can say anything in your comments and sign it Steve Heller. If I never comment as Steve Heller, then lies and distortions coming from someone signing my name never happen because people know I don't sign off on any comment as Steve Heller.

DES said...

Steve, points well taken and I will ponder 🙂